Notker Physicus

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Notker Physicus (c. 900 – 12 November 975) was a monk at the

Otto I and Otto II
.

Besides physicus (lit.'the physician'), he was also nicknamed piperis granum (lit.'pepper grain') on account of his monastic dedication. He is sometimes called Notker II, living after St. Gall's Notker the Stammerer and before Notker Labeo.

Life and career

Notker's birth year is unknown; the philologist Udo Kühne [de] estimated it around 900.[1]

His life was spent at the

Otto I and Otto II at some point.[3] Among his students was Balther von Säckingen [de], who dedicated his Vita sancti Fridolin to Notker.[1] He died on 12 November 975.[1]

Sometimes called "Notker II", he was the second in a line of Notkers at St. Gall; proceeded by Notker the Stammerer and followed by Notker Labeo.[3][4] Another Notker, who died on 15 December 975, was abbot of Saint Gall from 971 to 975 and nephew of Notker Physicus.[2]

He made several paintings, which were lauded by Ekkehard IV, particularly during a restoration effort for the Abbey's fire in 937.[1] Ekkehard also indicates that Notker authored now lost-poems and at least two musical compositions: an office for Saint Othmar, the "Rector aeterni metuende saecli", and a hymn, the "Hymnum beatae virgini".[1]

References

Citations

Sources

  • Hill Jr., Boyd H. (October 1974). "Reviewed Work: Notker der Arzt: Klostermedizin und Mönchsarzt im frühmittelalterlichen St. Gallen by Johannes Duft".
    JSTOR 2852042
    .
  • Jaffe, Samuel (Summer 1985). "Antiquity and Innovation in Notker's Nova rhetorica: The Doctrine of Invention". Rhetorica: A Journal of the History of Rhetoric. 3 (3): 165–181. .
  • Robert Appleton Company
    .
  • Kühne, Udo [in German] (2010). "Notker der Arzt" [Notker the doctor]. Historical Dictionary of Switzerland (in German). Bern: Swiss Academy of Humanities and Social Sciences. Retrieved 30 November 2020.